US7760685B2 - Opportunistic beamforming and scheduling of users in a communication system - Google Patents
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B7/00—Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
- H04B7/02—Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas
- H04B7/04—Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas
- H04B7/0413—MIMO systems
- H04B7/0452—Multi-user MIMO systems
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/50—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
- H04W72/52—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on load
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W16/00—Network planning, e.g. coverage or traffic planning tools; Network deployment, e.g. resource partitioning or cells structures
- H04W16/24—Cell structures
- H04W16/28—Cell structures using beam steering
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/04—Wireless resource allocation
- H04W72/044—Wireless resource allocation based on the type of the allocated resource
- H04W72/046—Wireless resource allocation based on the type of the allocated resource the resource being in the space domain, e.g. beams
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/50—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
- H04W72/54—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on quality criteria
- H04W72/542—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on quality criteria using measured or perceived quality
Definitions
- the present invention relates to beam generation and scheduling of users in a communication system.
- OS Opportunistic scheduling
- MOD multi-user diversity
- OS exploits the fact that many data services are delay tolerant. However, real time services such as voice, and in some cases video, can accept only a limited amount of packet delay, thus a scheduler should also consider packet delay statistics. Additionally, the issue of fairness should be addressed. Accordingly, a scheduler or scheduling algorithm implementing OS should weigh desired system throughput with fairness and delay statistic considerations.
- PF scheduler a scheduler known as a proportional fair (PF) scheduler has been developed to provide improved throughput and fairness over the downlink of the High Data Rate (HDR) standard. It has been shown that the PF scheduler maximizes the sum of the logarithms of the MS's average throughput.
- PF scheduler maximizes the sum of the logarithms of the MS's average throughput.
- a fraction of timeslots allocated to each user can be arbitrarily chosen based on desired objectives (such as meeting desired Quality of Service (QoS) requirements), and the scheduler then maximizes the average system throughput under the time allocation constraints.
- QoS Quality of Service
- QoS Quality of Service
- W i is the packet delay for MS i
- ⁇ i represents a delay threshold
- ⁇ i represents the maximum probability of exceeding the delay threshold, respectively.
- OBF Opportunistic Beamforming
- OS Opportunistic Beamforming
- the sequence of beams may be completely random and a-periodic, or could be chosen pseudo-randomly, from a fixed pre-designed collection of N beams.
- OBF techniques may be distinguished from other proposed downlink beamforming systems by the simplicity of the techniques. For example, and similar to OS, OBF requires a small amount of uplink feedback, while the beam generating algorithm runs independently, i.e., does not receive any information from the rest of the system.
- Communication systems employing OBF techniques have been considered in two different environments, an uncorrelated environment and a correlated environment.
- an uncorrelated environment propagation channels between a MS and any of the BS's antennas are all uncorrelated.
- a realistic system comes close to this case when the antennas of each BS are placed sufficiently apart (e.g., 10 feet at 2 GHz) and there is some scattering in the environment.
- the propagation channels between any MS and all the antennas of a single BS are highly correlated, but channels to different BSs are uncorrelated.
- a realistic system comes close to this case when the BS's antennas are placed close to each other, (e.g., one half wavelength apart), and the angle spread at the BS is low.
- a correlated system outperforms an uncorrelated system, the correlated system is therefore of focus herein.
- An exemplary embodiment of the present invention is directed to a method of determining a beam to be generated for a user.
- a user may be selected from a user population based on a parameter that is tracked for each user in the user population, and a beam preferred by that selected user may be determined.
- the preferred beam may be generated and used by a base station to transmit a pilot signal to the user population.
- Each user of the user population responds to the pilot signal.
- the base station may run a scheduling algorithm and schedule a user based on feedback received from all the users in the user population, and information may be transmitted to the scheduled user using the preferred beam.
- FIG. 1 is a graph demonstrating the effect of the number of MSs and T c on system throughput of a proportional fair (PF) scheduling algorithm.
- FIG. 2 is a graph illustrating a cumulative distribution function (CDF) of inter-packet delay in timeslots determined by the PF algorithm for different values of a parameter T c .
- CDF cumulative distribution function
- FIG. 3 is a graph illustrating a cumulative distribution function (CDF) of inter-packet delay for two equal-sized MS populations.
- CDF cumulative distribution function
- FIG. 4 is a flowchart describing methods of determining a beam to be generated for a MS and scheduling a MS to receive a transmission, in accordance with the exemplary embodiments of the present invention.
- FIG. 5 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus a probability of delay outage for a fixed MS population in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 6 is a graph illustrating a cumulative distribution function (CDF) of signal to interference ratio (SIR) in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- CDF cumulative distribution function
- FIG. 7 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus delay outage in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 8 is a graph illustrating MS throughput versus MS velocity in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 9 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus the standard deviation of the azimuth of MSs with respect to the mean azimuth of the MSs.
- FIG. 10 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus a probability of a short term throughput falling below 50% of a long term throughput in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- the term ‘user’ is synonymous to a mobile station (MS), user equipment (UE), subscriber, subscriber user, access terminal, remote station, etc., and describes a user of wireless resources in a wireless communication network. Frequently herein, user and mobile station may be interchangeably used.
- the term base station also known as a Node-B
- a system or network (such as an access network) may include one or more base stations.
- beam represents a specific radiation pattern generated by a base station.
- signal-to-interference ratio SIR
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- the exemplary embodiments are directed to an opportunistic beamforming method that may be used in conjunction with existing scheduling methods to improve system throughput while reducing user packet delay.
- the BS processes past reports (over time) received from the MS in response to pilot signals transmitted by the BS.
- the terms ‘scheduler’ and/or ‘scheduling algorithm’ may be used to describe a particular scheduling technique, it being understood that a scheduler or scheduling algorithm may be implemented both in hardware and/or software. Accordingly, these terms may be used interchangeably.
- the term beam as previously described above, represents a specific radiation pattern generated by a base station.
- Round robin scheduling is classic time division multiplexing, where the delay between successive transmissions to the same mobile station (MS) is fixed and equal for all MSs.
- a round robin scheduler runs autonomously and does not require any feedback in the form of channel state information.
- max-rate scheduling which always transmits to the MS that is capable of receiving at the highest data rate, yields the highest possible system throughput, but ignores fairness and delay altogether.
- Another scheduler, the PF scheduling algorithm has been shown to have desirable properties.
- PF scheduler is now described, and is envisioned as operating in combination with a beamforming method in accordance with the exemplary embodiments, it being understood that scheduling algorithms other than the following PF scheduler may be applicable herein.
- the PF scheduler discussed below is described in further detail in an article by Viswanath et al., entitled “Opportunistic Beamforming Using Dumb Antennas”, IEEE Trans. On Information Theory, vol. 48, No. 6, June, 2002.
- T i (n) denote the running average throughput of MS i at the beginning of timeslot n
- J n ⁇ 1, . . . , n M ⁇ denote the MS chosen for transmission in timeslot n
- n M is the number of MSs the BS supports (n M is treated as a fixed number, but may change from time to time as the algorithm is running).
- the running average throughput of MS i at timeslot T i (n+1) may be described by expression (1):
- T i (0) ⁇ i , where ⁇ i is a some given initial value, and T c is a free parameter that determines the effective memory of a throughput averaging filter of the scheduler. From expression (1) it may be seen that a large T c corresponds to a large effective memory for the filter, and vice versa.
- a scheduling decision implemented by a BS running a PF scheduler may be described by expression (2), where, in a timeslot n, the BS schedules a MS J n satisfying:
- the PF scheduling algorithm exhibits the following features: (a) the system throughput rises with the number of MSs up to a limit imposed by T c and the velocity of the MSs; (b) the system's throughput increases with T c , but, for a fixed number of MSs, the rate of throughput gain saturates as T c keeps growing; and (c) as T c grows, longer delays start appearing between successive transmissions to the same MS.
- FIG. 1 is a graph demonstrating the effect of the number of MSs and T c on system throughput of a proportional fair (PF) scheduling algorithm.
- PF proportional fair
- simulated cell throughput is shown as a function of the number of MSs, based on a timeslot (Ts) of 2 ms, SNR for all of the MSs of 0 dB, mobile velocity of 1 ms and RF carrier frequency (Fc) of 2 GHz.
- Ts timeslot
- Fc RF carrier frequency
- FIG. 2 is a graph illustrating a cumulative distribution function (CDF) of inter-packet delay in timeslots determined by the PF algorithm for different values of the parameter T c .
- CDF cumulative distribution function
- FIG. 2 demonstrates that the probability of long inter-packet delays (multiples of the mean inter-packet delay) rises with T c .
- the y-axis is the probability that the delay will not exceed the corresponding number of timeslots on the x-axis)
- FIG. 2 has the same parameters with regard to average SNR, timeslot duration and mobile velocity as in FIG. 1 .
- system model described below is merely just one possible system model; other system models may be applicable as is understood in the art:
- Each channel is subjected to correlated Rayleigh fading process, which is tied to the velocity of the MS, as described at page 55 of the book by G. L. Stuber, entitled “Principles of Mobile Communication, Kluwer Academic Publisher, 1966, pp. 52-55.
- the sequence of correlated Rayleigh variables may be chosen independently for each MS. This is accomplished using a suitable method such as is described in the article to Young et al, entitled “The Generation of Correlated Rayleigh Random Variates by Inverse Fourier Transform”, IEEE Trans. On Comm. Vol. 48, NO. 7, July 2000.
- the BS transmits at full power.
- the input buffers at the BS always contain data waiting to be transmitted. In other words, the delay experienced by packets on their way to the BS, or when waiting in a buffer is ignored.
- the above is not correct.
- FIG. 3 is a graph illustrating a cumulative distribution function (CDF) of inter-packet delay for two equal-sized MS populations.
- CDF cumulative distribution function
- FIG. 3 shows a CDF of inter-packet delay when the MS population includes two equal groups, one group with a mean SIR equal to 10 dB, and the other group with a mean SIR of ⁇ 10 dB.
- the ‘weaker’ group (mean SIR of ⁇ 10 dB Group) is significantly worse off than the ‘stronger’ group (mean SIR of 10 dB).
- the probability of delay exceeding 100 timeslots (10 2 on x-axis) for the stronger group is about only 1%, whereas the probability of mobiles in the weaker group having an inter-packet delay exceeding 100 timeslots is almost 6%.
- This inter-packet delay may be referred to as ‘waiting time’. Waiting time may be understood as the number of timeslots since a MS has received its last packet.
- the BS serving a group of MSs in a particular cell may track the waiting time for each MS that it serves in the cell. As will be seen below, in a given timeslot, a ‘longest waiting MS’ may be selected and the beam it prefers generated. This has the effect of raising the probability that the selected MS will be picked by the scheduler for transmission in the current timeslot.
- OBF is a “natural” enhancement of OS which utilizes multiple antennas at the BS, and implements an algorithm that generates a different beam every timeslot.
- OS which utilizes multiple antennas at the BS, and implements an algorithm that generates a different beam every timeslot.
- the N beams used in the simulations were spaced uniformly across a sector of 120 degrees, where the peak of the first beam and the N th beam coincide with the boundaries of the sector.
- the system under study (or ‘subsystem’ which may be characterized as a BS, the scheduler it is running, and the MSs the BS is serving) is typically just one contributor to the total end-to-end delay perceived by the MSs.
- the ability to support MSs with sufficient regularity and fairness it is necessary to de-couple the subsystem from the rest of the system. This may be done by assuming that the input buffers of the scheduler in the BS always contain data, and the time individual packets spend waiting in a buffer is ignored. That way, the individual packet arrival processes, which could be vastly different, do not affect scheduling decisions.
- the delay constraint may be defined in terms of a probability that the running average throughput, measured over a given time window that may be set by the specific application, falls below a given threshold.
- the delay performance may be measured in terms of the probability that inter-packet delay (delay between two successfully received packets) exceeds a certain threshold value. Occurrence of such an event may be referred to as a ‘delay outage’.
- the mean waiting time may be easily determined merely by the number of MSs the BS supports (n M ). For example, if there are 10 MS, the mean waiting time is 10 timeslots (mean waiting time). As there is no way to change the mean waiting time, improving the delay performance amounts to shrinking the upper “tail” of the probability density function curves of the inter packet delay (the CDF is shown in FIGS. 2 and 3 .
- a method of determining a beam to be generated for a MS makes use of past MS reports. No additional reports, or feedback, are required from the MS. Modifying the scanning sequence, based on information available at the BS, may make it possible to improve system performance in terms of throughput and delay statistics.
- a slow moving MS sends a substantial number of reports during a time interval where the propagation channel, with the fast fading averaged over, is practically unchanged.
- a MS “prefers” by averaging the reports the MS transmits in response to transmissions on each of the beams (assuming a moderate number of beams).
- the ‘preferred beam’ may be understood as the radiation pattern that has the highest average running data rate, or the corresponding SIR, for example, as indicated by the reports, or feedback, by the given MS to the BS.
- the BS may determine and generate the ‘preferred beam’ for a given MS based on the reports, or feedback, by the given MS to the BS, such as the reports a MS sends in response to a pilot signal transmitted by the BS, for example.
- FIG. 4 is a flowchart describing a method of determining a beam to be generated for a MS in accordance with the exemplary embodiments of the present invention.
- the functions in FIG. 4 may be implemented by hardware or software, such as by a microprocessor or digital signal processor implementing a software routine, for example.
- the functions outlined in FIG. 4 may be also considered as describing a joint opportunistic beamforming and scheduling algorithm, and a modification of the current sOBF algorithm.
- the exclusion window is a time window designed to prevent a beam from continually illuminating a MS having poor channel conditions, which could adversely affect system throughput.
- the exclusion window which may be set at a fixed size or varied in size, is described in further detail below.
- the BS tracks a common parameter of each MS it serves.
- This parameter could be the aforementioned ‘waiting time’ of the MS, i.e., the number of timeslots since the MS has received its last packet, for example.
- the BS could track a parameter such as the short term throughput of each MS, where an averaging, or filtering process, which is used to calculate the short term throughput, may be dictated by the application, and could be different for each MS. Further, the BS could track the short term throughput normalized by the long term throughput (or average throughput) of each MS it serves.
- the BS selects (function 420 ) a MS from the MS population based on a tracked parameter.
- FIG. 4 illustrates the tracking of just the aforementioned longest waiting MS, it being understood that this is merely an exemplary trackable parameter; other parameters such as calculated short term throughput and short term throughput normalized by long term throughput for each MS could be tracked by the BS
- the BS selects the MS that is the most ‘starved’ in terms of when the last packet was received.
- a MS which is known by the BS as having waited the longest period of time to receive a given transmission (such as a packet) may be selected as the longest waiting MS.
- MS i(n) the MS index for the given timeslot n.
- a preferred beam may be determined (function 430 ) according to a preferred beam algorithm, to be described in further detail below.
- the preferred beam is selected from the aforementioned finite set of N pre-selected beams. Whenever a beam was used in the past to transmit a pilot signal, a report was transmitted by each MS back to the BS. The BS thus has collected past reports for any beam, sent by all MSs in the MS population.
- the BS may average information in the reports the MS transmits in response to transmissions on each of the beams (assuming a moderate number of beams). Based on the collected reports, the ‘preferred beam’ may thus be the radiation pattern that has the highest average running data rate, or the highest corresponding average SIR, for example, as indicated by the reports of the MSs. Accordingly, the preferred beam for MS i(n) may be determined according to a preferred beam algorithm, an example of which is described below.
- the BS then generates (function 430 ) the preferred beam and uses the preferred beam to transmit a pilot signal (function 440 ).
- the BS receives reports from all MSs in the MS population it serves (function 450 ).
- Each of these reports may include an R i (n)term, which as discussed above with respect to the PF algorithm, represents an estimate of the maximum data rate the responding mobile is capable of receiving during the n th timeslot.
- the scheduler at the BS determines (function 460 ), based on the reports, which MS will receive a packet in the current timeslot. This may be done using the techniques described above with regard to the PF scheduler, so as to select a ‘winning MS’.
- the BS then proceeds to transmit data (function 470 ) to the to the MS J n selected by the scheduler in step 460 (which may, or may not be the MS selected in step 420 ) at the rate R j n (n) (see equation (2) on the beam selected in step 430 .
- the iteration is completed by updating the exclusion window and incrementing the timeslot counter for the next timeslot (function 490 ).
- the exclusion window is updated by pushing the index i(n), of the MS selected in function 420 into the exclusion window, thereby dropping the index i(n ⁇ L), which is the oldest index in the window, out of the exclusion window.
- Functions 420 - 490 may be repeated in subsequent timeslots.
- functions 410 - 430 and 490 may be performed as part of a beam determination routine to generate a preferred beam for another particular application other than scheduling or transmission for example.
- a method of scheduling may include generating a preferred beam in accordance with functions 410 - 430 , yet a BS may transmit information to a scheduled user using a beam other than the preferred beam.
- a method of determining a preferred beam in accordance with the exemplary embodiments may be used with any type of scheduling algorithm; the PF scheduler is merely one exemplary scheduling algorithm.
- the preferred beam may be determined in accordance with the following ‘preferred beam algorithm’:
- the beam preferred by MS i at timeslot n is b j if:
- Expression (3) says: the preferred beam of MS i at timeslot n is the beam having the highest running average fed-back rates of mobile i . In other words, evaluate each of the N beams one by one, looking for all past occurrences of the beam, and average past reports (or a chosen function of the reports), and pick the highest average.
- the denominator term ⁇ (l,k) is provided to normalize the expression.
- the parameter a, 0 ⁇ a ⁇ 1 is a “forgetting factor” allowing the preferred beam to track the location of the MS.
- the forgetting factor a should be small enough to allow MSs to track changes in their preferred beams, a process which, in macro-cells, is typically measured in seconds, while, at the same time sufficiently close to 1 to allow proper filtering of the fast fading.
- a good choice of a may be based on the de-correlation distance of the shadow fading, the physical size of the cell/sector and the MS velocity range of interest, for example (the de-correlation distance is the distance between two points, such that the correlation between the shadow fading components of the path loss between these points and the BS has decayed to some pre-selected value, e.g., to e ⁇ 1 ).
- expression (3) can be calculated iteratively for each MS using information from previous timeslots, as illustrated in expressions (4)-(6):
- the exclusion window L is an L dimensional vector, where L is at most n M ⁇ 1. Its jth component L j is either the index of any of the MSs, or zero. To assist in understanding the purpose of the exclusion window, imagine that L is set it zero, and MS i represents the longest waiting MS. The preferred beam algorithm will repeatedly determine (select) the beam that MS i prefers and will continue doing so in the next (and subsequent) timeslot(s) until MS i receives a packet, and thereby ceases to be the longest waiting MS. This has a negative effect on the system throughput.
- the purpose of the exclusion window is therefore to prevent the beam from repeatedly illuminating a MS that is slow to recover from a “bad” channel.
- L the longest possible exclusion window
- L the longest possible exclusion window
- L the longest possible exclusion window
- the BS knows the velocity of the MSs. It is therefore necessary to choose L with no knowledge of MSs' velocities. Nevertheless, good performance is obtained with widely spaced velocities, as will be shown in FIG. 6 , described hereafter.
- the number of beams (N) may affect performance of the modified OBF algorithm.
- increasing N increases the frequency of occurrence of long delays.
- increasing N has no detrimental effect, as long as sufficient reports are available for each beam to enable the algorithm to efficiently filter out the fast fading, while still tracking the mean attenuation of the propagation channel (excluding the fast fading). This may require periodic deviations from the beam generating algorithm to insert “missing” beams, thereby ensuring that all N beams are exercised with minimal periodicity. As long as these deviations consume a small fraction of the timeslots, the resulting loss is minimal.
- the ‘long term throughput’, ‘short term throughput’ and the parameters ⁇ and ⁇ may vary (and be set) based on a given application. This is analogous to the often employed practice to measure the quality of a communications link not by bit error rate (BER), but by “bad minutes per day” for instance.
- BER bit error rate
- the preferred beam algorithm instead of generating the beam preferred by the MS waiting the longest for the next packet, the preferred beam algorithm generates the beam preferred by the MS having the lowest ratio of short term throughput to long term (or average) throughput.
- FIG. 5 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus a probability of delay outage for a fixed MS population in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 5 shows the system throughput versus the probability of delay outage with T c as a parameter.
- the delay constraint (i.e., threshold value) is chosen to be 160 ms. For twenty MSs, this threshold value equals four times the mean delay of 40 ms.
- the throughput/delay curves of three systems are compared. The first, labeled “PF” is the PF algorithm with a single antenna. The second, labeled “sOBF” for standard OBF, is an OBF system with simple scanning of beams. The third curve, labeled “JOBS”, is the method described with respect to FIG. 4 in accordance with the exemplary embodiments of the present invention. The label JOBS is merely an identifier and should not be construed to limit the exemplary embodiments in any way. In FIG.
- both OBF systems use four antennas at the BS and generate the same set ⁇ b 1 , b 2 , . . . b 11 ⁇ of beams, but in a different order.
- the mean SNR values for all MSs is fixed at 0 dB, the mobile velocity fixed at 8 m/sec, and the exclusion window L fixed at 15.
- delay performance may be measured in terms of the probability that inter-packet delay exceeds a certain threshold value, where occurrence of such an event is known as a delay outage.
- a delay outage occurrence of such an event is known as a delay outage.
- the probability of delay outage is much lower for JOBS than sOBF or PF algorithms. It may thus be seen that JOBS may enable a higher system throughput to be achieved while at the same time reducing the probability of excessive delay.
- FIG. 6 is a graph illustrating a cumulative distribution function (CDF) of signal to interference ratio (SIR) in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- CDF cumulative distribution function
- SIR signal to interference ratio
- the dB path loss denoted A j,i between BS j and MS i (or any other BS, MS pair), was taken as the sum of two parts:
- a j,i ⁇ 35 log d j,i ⁇ j,i dB, where d j,i is the distance between BS j and MS i, and ⁇ j,i is the shadow loss of the j,i link.
- FIG. 7 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus delay outage in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 7 repeats the same experiment as shown in FIG. 5 , but for two different velocities (common to all MSs). In this case the SIR for each mobile is chosen independently from the CDF shown in FIG. 6 .
- FIG. 7 shows two cases: a first case where the velocity of all MSs is set to 1 m/sec; and a second case in which velocity of all MSs is 8 m/sec.
- the exclusion window match the number of MSs and their velocity.
- BSs typically do not know the velocities of the MSs they are serving, which in general are not equal, it was necessary to choose a certain fixed exclusion window L to use for all velocities.
- the exclusion window L was fixed at 15.
- JOBS performs better than sOBF and PF over both low and high velocities, but the gain is especially large at high velocities.
- the general trend for all three algorithms is that the delay outage deteriorates (rises) rapidly with increasing T c in the range shown, while the throughput shows small gain. Accordingly, from FIG. 7 it may be seen that JOBS enables achievement of higher throughput, while at the same time reducing the probability of excessive delay. Since T c is an arbitrary parameter, a desired trade-off between throughput and delay can be chosen so as to match the particular application.
- FIG. 8 is a graph illustrating MS throughput versus MS velocity in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention. To observe the throughputs of individual MSs with widely spread velocities under the OBF algorithms, different velocities were assigned to each MS in a seven MS system. The propagation channels are i.i.d. Referring to FIG. 8 , it may be seen that faster MSs experience higher throughputs than slow MSs, but the differences are not large.
- FIG. 9 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus the standard deviation of the azimuth of MSs with respect to the mean azimuth of the MSs.
- FIG. 9 shows system throughput versus the extent of clustering of the MS population around a certain azimuth, as seen from the BS.
- the extent of clustering is measured by the standard deviation of the azimuth of MSs with respect to the mean azimuth of the MSs.
- the advantage of the JOBS algorithm over the sOBF algorithm may be more evident when the MSs are not distributed evenly over the area of the cell/sector, but concentrated in designated areas such as a mall or along a major highway, for example.
- the sOBF algorithm ignores the uneven distribution of MSs, and spends as many timeslots illuminating lightly loaded, or even empty subsectors, as it does illuminating heavily loaded areas.
- the JOBS algorithm adapts itself to the MS's spatial distribution and avoids empty areas.
- N( ⁇ , ⁇ 2 ) e.g., a random variable that has a Gaussian distribution with mean ⁇ and standard deviation ⁇
- the mean ⁇ was chosen randomly and uniformly within the sector boundaries.
- the system throughput obtained is shown in FIG. 9 as a function of the standard deviation ⁇ .
- JOBS does much better than sOBF when ⁇ is low.
- FIG. 10 is a graph illustrating system throughput versus a probability of a short term throughput falling below 50% of a long term throughput in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the invention.
- the inventors reconfigured the preferred beam algorithm so that preferred beam algorithm generates the beam preferred by the MS having the lowest ratio of short term throughput to long term (or average) throughput.
- combining beamforming with scheduling as described above may help to ensure that MSs being served in a given cell or sector of a cellular wireless communication system are served fairly and regularly. Giving priority to a selected MS (whether selected as the longest waiting MS or based on another criteria) reduces the probability of long interruptions in receiving packets by the MSs, or periods of degraded service (long droughts), as the case may be, for example, improving overall system throughput while meeting system delay constraints.
- a preferred beam may be determined using system state information. In other words, no excess or additional signaling is needed. This may provide an improvement over the sOBF algorithm, which is run independent of system state information and thus receives no system state information as inputs, since beams are generated in a sequential or specified order to illuminate a cell or sector.
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Abstract
Description
In expression (1), Ti(0)=δi, where δi is a some given initial value, and Tc is a free parameter that determines the effective memory of a throughput averaging filter of the scheduler. From expression (1) it may be seen that a large Tc corresponds to a large effective memory for the filter, and vice versa.
In other words, expression (2) says that the BS transmits to the MS i having the largest Ri(n)/Ti(n) ratio. Including the term Ti(n) in the denominator means that MSs that have lately been “starved” (e.g., have not received a packet for a unusually large number of timeslots) are given relative priority in the scheduling process. When MS i is scheduled for transmission, transmission is made at rate Ri(n). It has been shown that the stochastic process {Jn}=n=0 ∞ is a Markov chain having a steady state distribution:
where πi is the long-term fraction of time allocated to MS i.
R i(n)=log2(1+SIR(n)).
Exclusion Window (L)
-
- a) Sufficient long term (average) throughput; and
- b) Short term drops in throughput should not occur too often, and should not be too deep. Quantitatively, (b) may require that the short term throughput fall below a fraction γ of the long term throughput in less than the fraction δ of timeslots.
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Also Published As
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JP4638207B2 (en) | 2011-02-23 |
DE602004004237T2 (en) | 2007-06-28 |
EP1536658A3 (en) | 2005-06-08 |
US20070135139A1 (en) | 2007-06-14 |
JP2005184799A (en) | 2005-07-07 |
KR101101717B1 (en) | 2012-01-05 |
JP2011061816A (en) | 2011-03-24 |
KR20050050541A (en) | 2005-05-31 |
EP1536658B1 (en) | 2007-01-10 |
JP4837124B2 (en) | 2011-12-14 |
DE602004004237D1 (en) | 2007-02-22 |
EP1536658A2 (en) | 2005-06-01 |
US7239879B2 (en) | 2007-07-03 |
US20050113116A1 (en) | 2005-05-26 |
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